Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 11, 1921, Page 8

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The Twentieth Century Laugh With Us— Not At'Us— Daylight Savings or 12 o’clock noon, brought him his in the afternoon giving day. —He Worked at Night— Fine Points in Rate-Maikng as follows, has them all beaten: straight pleasure car rate.’! Lumber Business and went into the Anyway he beat it a pile of wood, “him. — Woodman, Spare That Tree— Little or Nothing Dear Twentieth Century: don’t mean anything: pretty if it wasn’t for her face.” ' “This is ments.” . “The piccolo soloist ,wavered in h | ning” | girl.” —Sense of Sight— ALLIED NATIONS PAY TRIB (Cuntinued From Page 1) Barracks, and then as the proces ¢ from Fort Myer, Virginia. "7 At the White House, president, the suprene CO“{: inet and senate and the ho automobiles and young Hero ing men. in righteous cause. of marble. United States and commander- and hi this Unknown .Hero. Henr Ame can dered inguished &ervice. Immediately following this, from noon to 12:02, the' audictice stood in | people thoughout the United States, in ac- cordance with Prevident Harding's proclamation. paused in their work ~and gave “silent' prayer of thanks to the Giver of all good for these valu- silence ' 'and - prayer; ' and “able and valorous lives.” mown Hero the Congressional M of allied governments. Soldier w ain conducted service surrounded by the president and great panorama of peop'e. then tan: the Uhitad States or = H 7 Umited [g Once upon a time thers was a man | who didn’t have to get up until 11 and his wife breakfast to bed, and all he had to do was| to loll around and pass away the time, | and he got paid regulatly every week. Yet he wasnt thankful on Thanks- | When it comes to fine points in| .y Hill, Yorktown, Appomattox, Man- [ rate-making, the insurance schedule, | jjy, Santiago. Recent rating schedule announces that “Automobiles foy fupeml pur- \poses take the taxi or jitney bus rate, except hearses, which take the __0 De:th, Where Is Thy Sting?—| Three years ago yesterday Kaiser | Wilhelm of Germany fled to Holland Tumber business. “for the woods.” By this £‘mé he should Rave cut quite if the report is true that he has been cutting wood in ~ exile where there is no one to bother Please { add the following to the things that “That girl just passing would be the first time in my life | when they were importe I that I was ever behind in my pay-| high note in the buelissimo passage ) ‘ of the third movement of the adagio.” “I enjoyed the sermon this mor- “T don't think the fashions are asl q.. sensible as they were when 1 was ai UTE TO-UNKNOWN HERO on neared Ariington National cemetery the procession | Thaited for five minutes to allow the , the cab- se to take ride around in a dif- opent direction up the hills to Arling- ton. ‘Amidst the silent, shady groves of Arlington cemetery, on the hills of old Virginia, steeped in the history of the birth and struggles of this nation, America’s Unknown | found hig final resting place. | Here, this grave of honor wilt be sur- | - younded by the great monuments and Jittle headstones of America’s fight- And there wili be even | closer comrades, thousands .of other “unknown dead,” their numbers work- ed in lovely beds of flowers, victims of | this country’s conflicts of other days The burial services in the new and magnificent white marble Arlington Memorial Amphitheater began shorf- ly before noon, with the arrival of the | President and Mrs. Harding and the | other high officidls of thé government. Premiers of Europe and heads of for- eign armies and navies, in addition to our own dignitaries, filled this palace But no glamor of present-day gov- ernment ddtracted interest from orie figure sitting in one of the amphithe- ater boxes, a figure bent, gray and Yoy brokeri down by the ‘war. This wag | §i'u¢ aylng, bean, huile. in 158, Woodrow Wilson, president of the | h chief of the army and navy during the greatest war of history. His words ideals sent American sons across seas'to' do battle. He wanted to pay the homage of his heart to Sacred niusic'wag played in the am- phitheater, and after this the invoca- tion was given by Bishop Charles Brent, chief chaplain of the Expeditionary Forces in France during the war, when'he ren- The president then made his ad- dress, and later bestowed on the Un- i dal of Honor, and the hizhest decorations The casket bearing the Unknown as removed to the front of he an;‘nl(}n};)onter,.whcrc a sarcoph- agus ha ecn! nrenared, such as £l New: i by the Grocks of old. The chap, |'" e Beshopetecle Nowe | nd. prayers, = a i | ; Three salvos of gunfire burst forth, and s'float over the Virginia hills. The national salute of twenty-one guns. fired only for the president of { § foreign ruler. | moleted the highest homage “that{ his nation could give to its Unknown ero. - Around the top of the amphitheater = GAME, I\ 'GOING YO BN | | are hewn in the stone names forever |linked with America’s fight for free- ! dom and the preservation of our |ideals and principles of right—Bunk- \Marvelous:-Arg:; the ‘y_;)liflhu iEffects Produced on Ohe With a New Qutfit of Clothe It's wonderful . what 2 brand new and exhilarating outlook on life comes to one with the possession of a nev snit of clothes, new shoes, new 1inen, a new lat, new ties and a’new appear ance of one’s self whep he stands be- fore the mirror—and reflects, then, that after all the years are not telling on him sp badly as he thought, and the casual observer may, mistake him for a milllonaire. " . Bveryhody knows how miich finer | the home atmosphere is, and how much better ‘content -seems ;to brood in it, when the house cleaning is done in | Stamped in blood on the sarcoph- | Yy agus in front of Arlington Memorial Amphitheater are other names of equal impestance in the history of this | nation-—Chateau Thierry, Argonne, | | Saint-Mihigl. . “The muffled drums’ sad voll has I'beat' for this *“unknown,” and his | | unknown_comrades who lie in peace | in Flanders ‘Field, where f‘poppies\ grow, between the crosses, row on; row.” i BEFORE THE DAY OF GLASS Leather Battles Were Ovice jn 7Cog- | | mon Use, and Served Their Pur- | pose Admirably. 5 | the _spring, when _the furnjture is wmoyed, abput .jnto pew. positions, the 1 old’ wall papers_go, down,, new paiut Tn past_ days England had many ' P 80, et Battles ang drightpess finds its WAy to kitch- en and to floors, DeWw. TIES 4PDEAT, new 1 curtains and a ney aspect of coziness ty of native pottery .:md witich ‘cheers the whiole family. costligess of such things ‘ The, new outfit for the indjvidual nas just this same, sort.of happy ef- Among these leather. vessels were fect, says a writer In the New York [ the water bouget, the Teather bottle, \World, We knoy if, biit haw long and the blackjack, the lastnamed in- <o offer stupidly postpone. the bl Ting all pots made in leather. The jng1 “How lofg we “gloom, unnecessar- houget was a pair of water jly jn coats that feel so greasy to the | vined together bY “touch, in trousers that shine, inshirts | their necks like a pair of glass oil and gpq neckwear that seem like an old ar hottles, The leather bottle noe week whéneyer they are fas- [ was - used” nil the "end of the tapeq fogether; ip bats thaf afe dingy hteenth century, its liter use being 454 shoes that do not suggest states- | i the harvest fields. nianship, urbanity, social stapding or English h'i\fl\l‘l'. drinking v and giiyence, to auy to whom ‘they may | hottles Mad *thé characte 9t De exhibited. strength ang, solidity and were made The''most -pardonable spendthrift in of ‘tanned oxhide, which was thick ihe, world s he who after a proper and rigid; while foreign-made bottles “venorosity to his dependents puts zenerilly seem to have been—and still ypney on his own back, finds |1ie1|sl|re are, where they exist—composed o 1y poing an_ object of “enviable adwi- & lighter and thinner lenther obtained o) on the strect gid swhen e itos { from the goat, pig or sheep, which Was ‘Fyonts Jiis Peliow mi for buisiness or { cured in such a manner as to remain plensu"ie looks as if optimism Avere ""“Il'“.'-‘ ki E his bosom companion and worry the There 1s grent variety among these, jagp 1ow thought of self-indulgence in leather vessels, which were made of his soul ¢ o % plain and stamped leather, and about g > which many particular uses and as- sociations sprang up. other ceptaeles made This 15 laggely owing and 1o wlass and t SAW VALUE OF STEAM POWER Newspapes; pfi 11821 Hailad ‘With Joy the Passing of the Day of the .. 48ailing Vessel, " Torn Bill Tip Brought Results, “Waiter, I'm going to be here for five or six days,” said the keen busi: |+ <2yp ness man from Chicago, as he sat down in a New York restaurant, ac- cording to the Sun. appear to recede ‘at the test of experi- Whereupon he removed from his ment and reason, Says the National wallet u ersp $5 bill and carefully Gazette of, Qct. 4, 1821 The sfean- tore it in half. ship Robert Fylton was_full of pos- ““Ihis half you aré fo keep, and If, sengers from New. Opleans. and you glvé me good service during my Charleston, and each trip which this Visit here T will deliver the other half _splendid vessel makes not only gives of the biil to you just before I go ~ample proof of “safety . and dispateh, away, n t but adds to the nu “Yassir,” beamed the waiter, favor of. Stefll"fi" And -the keen business man from , What u glgan Cnicago had mo complaint to make 'encel hose whp about the excellent service he received .’ crossing the A fi““fil el at this restaurant during his stay. /pelled topass, days and s Feny B I T et e The clougds ;of prejudice and fear 2 WOMY MOD WAVE FUN2M . WITH NUMIN- O LD POR THIS Iy NEWSPAPER =) "o iy Srary ! FIRES 1 ANSWER El MAIL % SWERP GLY W WASH "' PRESS N WRIYE QOPM ' READ A STACK O EXCHANGES 'N.SEND QUY SYBTEMENTS wn SO SOLOMON WAS ARBAYED h | i déad efIm;” Whien™ (il uiiFuflled surface of the ocean” that reflects like:a iir-. ror, and when the sun pours down his fierce and intolerable rays and the sails flay to and fro, can imagine what their feclings must be at seeing the steayghip pass them rapidly; the wheels in quick motion and the smoke rolling in curled volumes from the rnace ; to see myriads of well-dressed passengers wilking the de Phie next improvement of value is to make steamships darry. freight—say 150 tons of fine goods; and those which run from Montreal to Quehec may serve as models. There is yet much to he in this-way gnd from the enterprise of our citizens there is no doubt it will be daone In time. Beautiful Coconut Paim, The coconut-palm is a beautiful tree. runk, seldom,exceeds 20, inches in - at the base, and rises jn a | .slender, graceful column.fo a height ! ere it bursts into | It of 80 or 100 feet, W a canopy of dark green foliage. has been likened to a rocket, ri to a hundred feet or more and burst- 1 ing into i shower of fronds. The | space bengath is ool and inviting, | partly and sometimes wholly shielded Trom the rays of the tropical sun. A coconut grove on a coral beach, washed ny_the waves of 2 tropic and splastied by the filtered be: of a silvery moou, is an enclianted place, and that one. on the island of Gui- maras qeress the. strait from Tloilo, a fairy land, well-fifted as the “dwelling place of ‘the entrapcing Do; lores in “Floradora.” P A g, T T Better He adn't Insisted. The author of a few novels, meet- ing aliterary frfend, began talking! with him_about his,” the author’s lat- ext’ work, . Presently ‘he ‘said: *“You go ubout a good ‘deal, Brown, Tell i me what ‘you hear about.my book.” “] assure you,” dnswered the other, N' “{hat T've-heard nothing but the most g favorahle and enthmsiastic opinions of 40n, thaf's goad ]’ Now tel] me who has talked to you about it.” “Um—well, 1 can’t tell you that ex- actly,” . ' ““Oh, yes, ypu "the only one I'ye heard say anything about it."—Boston Transecript. Art Js a Science.: Whistler Jaid down the dictum that “qrt is a selence—the science by which the artist plcks, chooses and groups, “that beauty, may result.” And he add- ed. wisely “The artist can leave no more to chduce than, can the chemist. the botanist ‘or tlie biologist.” - 'This as clearly to house dec- ‘any other of the arfs. It ¥ applies quite | oration as s piily by pickin ing and group- *ing intelligently and according to prin- i . efpley glxn('un_nnt!étlc interior can he' bulit up. | OIS | BN et . Bridge of ‘fraqln Memori The . promise was fulfilled. The Bridge of Sighs at Venice, over which all prisoners are taken from the hall "of judémen the place whe executlon tukes place, i3 an anclent truetur but no_ rec has, been*kept of the number of prisoners who hdve passed 4 over it & w Britain's MA;y Islands. 1t is said that in the British empire, H on which g,he Sun, ts, there Fa ) ure !IIOI'C‘ 'l{[\l\ »..O.Wifignfis,' pURE] i 3 < Jmposgible 'to give the e i fi— ‘because some clumps’ o ks gnig N ot “be called istands. | Ancient Form of Adornment. ’ o i Tattooing, that very apparent means | X LS | of prnch\l‘ulggg one’s lgve for the briny is an. ancient 'fg':rlh of adorn- nd- in’ an¢fent timed most hon- | oable” 'The | Polypegighs are known huve heen adepts l!: the art, and fill! vom that (hpe, to thig fhere have al- ‘H | deep, itient, Ctracted to this forgh of benuty. These Hil decorations hjive, taken, all sorts of forms, {ront the plain Flaek and white work to that in the most variegated “colol to'say nothing of the meth- " tattooing, which consists of cutting deep gashes in the desired design, filling them with clay and then ! letting them remain as a sort.of cameo | ADDITIONAL WANT ADS P ;ch‘firn;\:tg ‘."l;eeif;‘f\ou-se! for family ! dren; boy, 10; girl, 6. Good home | The Coftee with the rich and mellow flavor way's been pegple who have been at- (il Sy e v SERVED‘AT TROPFMAN'S : Friday andSaturday | Coflié‘ Tn and Be Cotivinced! Finch Co. of ‘man and two chil-| TRy e e ;‘Dls‘dbfafoi‘g‘ ¢ & & . i sell & man some kind of a gold brick i »cp‘fi. 1 ins‘is 34 1 “Wwell, then, since you insist, you're 4} . AP OUTSIDE O' “THEM M. PASTIMES N 16023 OTHER THINGS , Nou KIN WOAF "N YAKE W\FE 1S ASW ‘. ‘N FEED ' 208 PRESS, N WA ON “GUSTOMERS , ‘N AMSWER “TH' PHONE ' FOLD PAPERS 'M RUN “TH' MAWLER ‘N S PACIEM PEEVED SUBSERABERS 'N QoLLeey BILLS AROUND “wWWN 'N ALK TO HOAFERS T \ — za For the Invaid. Straws -way be used ipn -givirg Jiquids to sick children when they not be moved. Glass tubes are easl broken, but a bundle of straws, such as used at soda fountains, may he purchased at small cost. The Dofiar Mark! What Does It Stand For? % ¥ 5% An accountant, or taken a course in scienti Not nfluenced by the Moon. The bureau of animal industry says there 1s no- foundation in fact for the superstition that the various phases of the nmor.'has anything te do wiily the proper time to set hen's eggs: N The Dark Cloud. It is not surprising that clouds come in for more or less criticism. They lie high, are often dissipated, and cin uspally be classed with the wets. Ay named Lee, who had never heard of efficiency ific office management, took the Spanish “peso” and abbreviated it, thus “§”. It saved him time: It pleased his eye and stood for value given for value received. America liked and adopted it. 1t is nearly a century and a half old now, but never has the $n represented so many uncertain conditions as during the past few years. ‘This /$ mark now-a-days represents more than . over before the policy back of every business. li in the J. C. Penney Company, this § mark represents a policy of freedom, equal opportunity and progress. * FREEDOM because it buys for cash and sells for cash. ; EQUAL OPPORTUNITY because every store offers ual apd exceptional opportunity to its salesmen to be< come co-partners. % PROGRESS because the § circulating through 312 stores in 26 States keeps prosperity moving, bringing benefits to one and all. s ) Every Individual. E\{'ery individual has a place to fill in “{be world, and is important In some respect, whether ‘e chooses to be s0 or not.—Hawthorne. | Jud Tunkins. Jud Tunkins says it's hard to cn- vinee a man that the world is getting better #when he tinds that hls own - ticular business is getting worse. Uncle Eben. “It's casier,” said Uncle Eben, “to dan it is to give him valuable advice free of charge.” x Even Better. If you cannot go wherever please, you can at any rate try please wherever you go.— Fosiin Transeript. 4 i you TR R " HERE 1S "THE CARD .= . FOR THE :—— ; | UTS ATTH‘”E NEW ARMORY , 5 | a Armistice Day, Nov. 1 | PTERY Y STARTINGAT 3P. M. MAIN BOUT—8 ROUNDS & OF:ST. PAUL OF MINNEAPOLIS® STEWART McLEAN ~Vs— BILLY BURKE SEMI-WINDUP—8 ROUNDS ‘GEORGE BAUER-Vs-JIMMY WOODHALL “OF ‘ST. PAL {3OF F ERGUS FALLS PRELIMINARY—6 ROUNDS TOMMY TIBBETTS- VS~ TOMMY HANNON. e bS] PPEEMIDIL T " QF ST. PAUL: PRELIMINARY—6 ROUNDS' ARRY BRODD-vs— BUDDY McDONALD . 'OF BEMIDJI'* .. ' OF ST/PAUL " CURTAIN-RAISER—4 ROUNDS H (171}t Pyfay BOTH OF BEMIDJL ., JIMMY POTTS OF MPLS. WILL REFEREE OUR ' TICKETS NOW ON. SALE AT THE CITY DRUG STORE ch""' Y ALL OTHER.:SEATS. $2.40 EVERYBODY RINGSIDE WILL BE $3.00 767-W. " ‘and will pay $20 per monthfif’hune’l THERE! Including Tax ¥ Y Including Tax CHUB FROST —Vs~ HARRY PETERSON | fm’ YOU WANT TO RENT. BUY. SELL OR TRADE. ADVERTISE IN PIONEER WANT COLUMR

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